![]() And no, Fiverr system will not note the emails and cut me off - the instructions are clear: don’t share emails UNLESS needed to complete the order. Not worth it when there are better alternatives. What are you talking about? I deliver through wetransfer / file mail a lot, and that requires an e-mail. It may work for a while, but not a best practice. Passing emails is just a matter of time before it bites someone. (Large eLearning and/or video syncing projects.)Ī Google Drive or Dropbox share works great (along with a few others), and is allowed. While most of my files are not over the 150 mb limit (Voice overs), I’ve done plenty where I’m delivering 25 to 90+ WAV files that are hundreds of MB in size. Not to mention there is no reason needed to send emails just for the delivery. Some people get away with it for months, then have their account shut down. You can send a link from GDrive, Dropbox, WeTransfer or a few other services.Įventually the Fiverr system will note the emails and cut you off. You don’t need to use email to deliver over the 150 MB limit. I regularly give my e-mail to clients, or ask their e-mail, because I work in video and the 150 mb limit is simply not enough. I think a lot of people are extremely afraid of the TOS, though. But they are similar in the fact that they’re the entire production team. However, I’d like to clarify that VO gigs (like the posters), are sold by word count and musical recordings are sold by time. Working for promises and aspirations hurts the standard prices of other sellers. Your fees may reflect how long something takes or how many things you did during that time. ![]() With that said- your time is what you’re selling. If you created something while your time was purchased, your creation may have a specific reason…and you may grant the person who purchased your time commercial use of that creation (meaning they may benefit financially from your creation or even own the master) but that doesn’t suggest you are giving away ownership : “Buyouts” are not technically what audio “art creators” are offering on fiverr. Copyright registers and harbors a legal document of the creators but is not technically necessary to “own” your creation… it’s only necessary to collect royalties. If a work is NOT registered for copyright- then by law, said work is owned by the person who created it. Performance royalties, writer royalties and publishing ownership are all different things. Specifically royalties relate to instances where third parties distribute the performance (television, radio, bookstore’s etc.) If a work isn’t registered to a national copyright firm, royalties will not be collected. Royalties are collected by publishing firms. This is a major problem in audio performing gigs stemming from incorrect buyer expectations and a lack of understanding regarding royalties vs commercial sales vs usage.
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